Farmers' & Merchants' State Bank of Ballinger v. Cameron

231 S.W. 738, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 432
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedJune 8, 1921
DocketNo. 190-3239
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 231 S.W. 738 (Farmers' & Merchants' State Bank of Ballinger v. Cameron) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers' & Merchants' State Bank of Ballinger v. Cameron, 231 S.W. 738, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 432 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

Statement of the Case.

KITTRELL, J.

The facts out of which this case arose, stated as concretely as is consistent .with clearness, are as follows:

On April 20, 1910, the Camerons executed their note to the bank for $4,600 payable at three months. There had been a previous note for $3,000 given, or at least credits to that amount in favor of the Camerons had been entered on the books of the bank, somewhere between two and three weeks before April 20, 1910, in contemplation of the use of the money in buying a lot of mares out on the Rio Grande border.

They bought to the extent of $4,600, or $1,600 in excess of the deposit, and their drafts to the extent of $4,600 were paid by the bank. The entire indebtedness was on April 20th put into one note for $4,600, and the jury found that $138 interest was paid by the Camerons on the day the note was given, but it was extended for the full amount, and was again extended when it fell due.

Other notes were given from time to time, and certain payments were made, and other money borrowed or other advances made to or for the Camerons by the bank over a period of time of about four years; the total number of notes in the way of extensions of the original note and additional amounts for ne.w advances being 14.

The series of loans and payments and extensions finally culminated in one note for $10,530, dated March 31, 1914, bearing 10 per cent, interest, and due January 1, 1915, with interest from maturity until paid.

The Camerons, coincident with the execution of said note, executed a deed of trust on five several tracts of land situated in Runnels county. The deed of trust was in the usual form.

Default having been made in payment of the note, the trustee in due and regular form sold the land at public sale on April 6, 1915, for the purpose of paying the notes, less the credits.

It appears that there were a number of bidders, but the highest bidder was the bank, and the land was adjudged and knocked off to it for the amount of its bid, which was $8,750, the full amount of which was credited on the note, and a deed made by the trustee to the bank, of which institution he was cashier.

The Camerons on September 25, 1915, filed suit against the bank to recover upon an alleged claim of usury, alleging as a summary of all their specific allegations as follows:

“That the actual indebtedness due from plaintiffs to defendants at the time of the sale of said land was only the aggregate sums herein-before mentioned, to wit, $10,900; less actual payments and credits hereinbefore set out in the aggregate sum of $5,893.24; making actual indebtedness due from plaintiffs to defendant the sum of only at the time of the sale $5,007.35.”

They plead that, the property having been sold for $8,750, and the acceptance of said bid, and the crediting of the $8,750 on the indebtedness, the said defendant collected $3,742.65 usurious interest, and prayed judgment for double that amount, and prayed in the alternative for the difference between $8,750 and $5,007.35, which is $3,742.65.

The case was submitted on 42 special is[739]*739sues prepared by the court and other special issues submitted at request of counsel.

The judgment recites that defendants had “received and collected from the plaintiffs * ⅜ * $3,577.15 usurious interest, and judgment was rendered for double that amount, or for $7,154.30.

Defendant by .way of cross-action alleged, in substance, that certain parties, Terry by name, had executed to the British & American Mortgage Company, Eimited, their note for $3,000 secured by deed of trust on two of the tracts of land for which plaintiffs had given the bank a deed of trust, being the first two tracts described in plaintiffs’ petition, aggregating 341 ½ acres; that, while the note and security were valid and subsisting, the Terrys conveyed the two tracts to the plaintiffs, who assumed the payment of the $3,000 note executed by the Terrys; that later, July 1, 1912, the Camerons agreed with the mortgage company upon an extension of payment of the note for five years from November 1, 1912,. at 8 per cent., payment to be made in certain installments not necessary to enumerate. Later the time of payment of certain of the installments was extended.

Defendant alleged that it owned the $3,000 note by assignment in writing from the mortgage company, and that certain specified installments of interest had not been paid, wherefore they had declared the whole debt due.

The proof showed that the mortgage company on September 7, 1916, for value received, assigned the trust deed and the $3,000 note to the defendant bank without recourse.

When the transfer was taken, the note for $240 first mentioned in the extension agreement had been paid. The bank paid it before the transfer. It had paid the first three principal notes,, and the interest note had been taken up. This had been done without request of the Camerons.

The bank prayed for personal judgment on the note against the Camerons, alleging they were notoriously insolvent, and prayed that, if any judgment be recovered against it, it be offset by the judgment on the $3,000 note.

In response to a special issue the jury answered that the bank bid solely for the equity of the Camerons in the land. The court adjudged that the bank take nothing by its cross-action.

Opinion.

The case may properly be determined upon the assumption that the transactions out of which the litigation arose were tainted with usury. As we construe the record, and the assignments of error, there is in the ap--plication for writ of error no serious attack made upon the findings of the jury by the motion for a new trial, or upon the con-elusions of the Court of Civil Appeals as to the question of usury.

[1] Whether usury entered into the notes was a matter demonstrable by calculation, and none is presented in the record to show that it did not, and, the trial court’s finding that it did having been approved by the Court of Civil Appeals, it is not within our province to consider the question.

[2] The plaintiff in error contends, as we interpret the application for writ of error, that even if it be conceded that usury had been paid, nevertheless the sale under deed of trust was “involuntary” payment, and that by reason of that fact the defendant bank did not in fact “collect” or “receive” usurious interest so as to bring its action within the purview of article 4982, V. S. C. S. This is the first of the only two questions presented by the application.

In a technical sense the sale may have been, indeed was, involuntary as to plaintiffs, but it was certainly not “involuntary” as concerns the defendant bank. Pursuant to the provisions of the'deed of 'trust, it sold the property and bid $8,750, and the property was knocked off to it (the bank), and the whole amount of the bid was credited on the debt, and the bank received a deed to the property.

What does, and what does not, constitute “payment” of usurious interest is a question which has been frequently before the courts, and is one by no means free from difficulty. We have not 'been able to find any case entirely like the instant case. Before the writer became a member of the court the case of Gunter v. Merchant, 213 S. W.

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Bluebook (online)
231 S.W. 738, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-merchants-state-bank-of-ballinger-v-cameron-texcommnapp-1921.